The paper doesn't really get into the book's diagnosis, which connects lawyers' unhappiness to the intellectual aridity that pervades both the classroom and the law office: an obsession with analytic precision, formalistic legal reasoning, and consistency with precedent, and a detachment from the resources that we use to create meaning elsewhere in our lives -- social context, narrative, ambiguity and complexity. It's a terrific book and it's available at fine bookstores everywhere.